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  3. National eGovernment Stud...

National eGovernment Study 2025

The National eGovernment Study 2025 published on 25 March 2025 shows that the online trend is continuing: the population and companies are increasingly using digital services provided by the authorities. The range of services offered by the authorities is also growing. At the same time, many users do not know which services are available digitally – they would like it to be easier to find the services.

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National eGovernment Study 2025 [/application/files/7417/4317/4879/Report_National_E-Government_study_2025.pdf]

Summary

Use of digital public services continues to grow [#nutzung]
Trust in online government services is high and continuing to rise [#vertrauen]
The general public and the businesses predominantly contact public authorities using email [#kontakt]
Obstacles to the use of digital government services [#huerden]
Data protection concerns are mainly a question of the age of the users [#datenschutz]
Most individuals obtain information via search engines [#suchmaschinen]
What needs to improve for users [#verbesserungen]
The Confederation and cantons are prioritising the introduction of the e-ID [#eid]
Authorities would like more processes to be seamless [#medienbruchfrei]
Cantons and communes are increasingly working together on e-government [#zusammenarbeit]
Detailed report on AI to be published [#ki]
About this study [#studie]

Use of digital public services continues to grow

73 % (+4 %) of the general public opts for online access at least half of the time, to complete their tax return or to buy the e-vignette, the electronic motorwax tax sticker. Flexibility to access the services at any time and the resulting time savings remain the main reasons for using e-services. Increasingly, the general public would like to have access to a broader range of digital services, such as reporting of petty offences (45 %), domicile and vehicle registrations (43 %), and options to order various documents.

66 % 

of the population is satisfied with the authorities’ online service offering.

Trust in online government services is high and continuing to rise

The general public’s trust in online government services at all federal levels is growing which is a good prerequisite for using digital government services. Respondents generally have a particularly high level of confidence
in the services provided by cantonal authorities.

The general public and the businesses predominantly
contact public authorities using email

The general public primarily contacts public authorities by email, via portals for digital services, via contact forms, or by telephone. Face-to-face contact, for example at a front desk, is also quite popular. Businesses primarily use email to contact public authorities. They are also keen on contact
via telephone and portals.

78 %

of businesses use public services online.

Obstacles to the use of digital government services

Of the businesses surveyed, 10 % identify obstacles to the use of digital government services, which represents a significantly lower proportion than for the general public. Businesses believe the following factors are a
particular hindrance:

  • complex and time-consuming registration processes
  • it is too complicated to find the right government services
  • a lack of centralised access to public authority services

These factors are also assessed more critically than in previous surveys.

According to 53 % of the general public (an increase of 6 percentage points from 2021), the biggest obstacle to the use of digital government services is that they are difficult to find.

Data protection concerns are mainly a question of the age of the users

A lack of information on data protection is also a hindrance in the use of digital government services. However, while only 4 % of participants aged under 24 see it as an obstacle, up to 23 % of those aged over 55 do.

Most individuals obtain information via search engines

The in-depth interviews further demonstrate that the majority of respondents use popular search engines such as Google as their first port of call when looking for information. Interviewees mentioned only a few specific cases where they would go directly to public authority websites.

«The Confederation’s online counter EasyGov.swiss offers a central point of
contact; it has already been remarkably successful. Since the launch of EasyGov.swiss in 2017, user numbers have risen steadily, and
businesses’ satisfaction with the authorities’ online service offerings is gratifyingly high.»

 

Markus Pfister, Interim Head of e-Government for SMEs at SECO

What needs to improve for users

The general public (53 %) would like better information about what services are available online and how they can be used as well as for the services to be more user-friendly (52 %). User-friendliness is also important to businesses. This opinion is therefore expressed by half of businesses in German-speaking Switzerland and almost 40 % of those in both French-speaking areas and Ticino. Just under 40 % of all businesses also stated that better information is needed about what services can be accessed online, and that they would like access to all services in one central location, rather than having to visit different websites and portals. 36 % would like the relevant government services to be easier to find.

The Confederation and cantons are prioritising the introduction of the e-ID

As regards priority objectives for e-government services, the Confederation and cantons place the introduction of a state-recognised e-ID in first place, while it is the second-ranked goal for the communes. The top priority of the communes is to work together to expand digital government services across Switzerland.

«Digital Public Services Switzerland
(DPSS) is involved in overarching
projects such as the development and introduction of the state-recognised e-ID. It will significantly simplify access to digital public services at all federal levels. The Digital Public Services Switzerland strategy for 2024–2027, which came into force in 2024, addresses further gaps.»

 

Dr. Peppino Giarritta, Officer for the Confederation and Cantons for Digital Public Services Switzerland

Authorities would like more
processes to be seamless

Public authority representatives would like to be able to offer more processes and services without media discontinuity. They believe it is particularly important to develop end-to-end digital public services. 

A lack of staff resources and legal frameworks is slowing the authorities down.

Cantons and communes are increasingly working together on e-government.

Communes and cantons have stepped up cooperation on e-government matters since 2021. Over 40 % of communes and almost 60 % of cantons now have relevant agreements in place, and the proportion of legally regulated cooperative agreements has increased significantly.

Detailed report on AI to be published

The target groups were asked about artificial intelligence (AI) in this survey. A detailed report on how highly population, companies and administrations rate their knowledge of AI, where they already use AI or how they would like to use it in the future will be published at a later date.

About this study

Digital Public Services Switzerland (DPSS) and the State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO) jointly carried out the National eGovernment Study in 2024. The first study was published in 2017, the second edition followed in 2019, and the third edition in 2022. The key findings of the study were presented to an expert audience at the Swiss eGovernment Forum on 25 March 2025.

Contact

Digital Public Services Switzerland Office

Irem Türkes-Kaynarca

Email

+41 58 461 13 69

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